MYTH: "Immigrants take our jobs"
The largest
wave of immigration to the U.S. since the early 1900s coincided with our lowest
national unemployment rate and fastest economic growth.
Immigrants create new jobs by forming new businesses, buying homes, spending
their incomes on American goods and services, paying taxes and raising the
productivity of U.S. businesses.¹ In fact, between 1990 and 2004, roughly 9 out
of 10 native-born workers with at least a high school diploma experienced wage
gains because of increased immigration.
A legal flow of
immigrants based on workforce demand strengthens the U.S. economy by keeping
productivity high and countering negative impacts as the U.S. aging population
swells. Of the twenty occupations that will see the largest growth in
the next seven years, twelve of them only require
on-the-job-training--including jobs in SEIU's core industries like home care,
cleaning/janitorial services, child care, and hospitality services.³ But as
native-born workers seek higher education and move up the occupational ladder,
the number of native-born workers seeking employment in these industries has
shrunk.
The problem with today's economy is not
immigrants; the problem is our broken immigration laws that allow big business
to exploit workers who lack legal status, driving down wages for all workers. If
every immigrant were required to get into the system, pay their dues, and
become U.S. citizens, we could block big business' upper hand, eliminate the
two-tiered workforce, and build a united labor movement that raises wages and
living standards for all workers.
The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) has created
some information cards concerning some of the most popular myths about
immigration. For example, the myth that
Immigrants take our jobs.
The cards and information are here. http://www.seiu.org/cards/the-8-worst-myths-about-immigration
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